Following the
CBO analysis of the so-called “Kennedy bill,” the White House
has decided to distance itself from the legislation. To recap,
this is the bill that originated from the Senate’s Health,
Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee chaired by Ted
Kennedy. The general road map for health care in the coming
months was that HELP would release a liberal bill, then the
Finance Committee would come up with a more moderate version
focused on costs, and then they would merge them together and
pass one bill next month, before the August recess, then wait
until fall to reconcile that with whatever comes out of the
House.
Today, Jake Tapper
reports:
Kennedy?
Kennedy who?
“This is not the Administration’s bill,” White House press
secretary Robert Gibbs said in a statement following the
Congressional Budget Office’s analysis of Sen. Ted Kennedy’s
health care reform legislation, “and it’s not even the final
Senate Committee bill.”
The CBO found that the cost of just a portion of the bill would
be $1 trillion over 10 years, and that it would only reduce the
number of uninsured by 16 million or 17 million, meaning it would
still leave 30 million uninsured (using the most commonly cited
measure for the number of uninsured, 46 million).
It’s true that the Kennedy bill isn’t the final Senate bill, but
it clearly is one of the major versions of health care
legislation, and the White House just ran away from it as if it
were a new book by Jeremiah Wright titled, “Them Jews.” It also
was the product of months of effort by leading Senate Democrats.
Is it possible that we can start to see friction develop with
Congress as President Obama takes a more active role on the
health care push? Remember, one of the things that hurt
HillaryCare in 1993/94 was feeling by the members of Congress
that everything was being dictated to them by the White House.